1. Questions on Peyton's New Contract

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On Thursday evening, quarterback Peyton Manningsigned a renegotiated contract. It was originally believed that the reworked contract merely added a $10 million injury insurance policy for the Broncos and had no effect on the team's salary cap.

As it turns out, that is not the case.

On Sunday evening, Brian McIntyre ofYahoo! Sports'ShutdownCorner.com reported that the renegotiated deal actually gives the Broncos and additional $2.5 million in cap space, in both 2013 and 2014. Under the new deal, Manning will receive $17.5 million over the next two seasons, as opposed to the total $40 million he was scheduled to make.

That other $5 million has been pushed back to the final years of his contract. If he is not cut in the spring of 2015, he will make $21.5 million that year and another $21.5 million in 2016 (again, if he is not cut before then).

So why is Denver freeing up the money now? They could be thinking ahead (long-term deals are pending for offensive tackle Ryan Clady and punter Britton Colquitt), or they may be making room to add another veteran.

These questions will be asked—and may begin to be answered—during minicamp.

It is understandable, too. Woodson wants to be paid like the talented defender that he is, and not at the veteran minimum, especially if he is going to see considerable playing time.

With that being the case, the Broncos may be his best option.

According to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport, the Broncos are the only team that has offered Woodson more than the minimum. In fact, Rapoport reports that other teams have "balked at eclipsing the minimum."

With $9.9 million in available cap space, the Broncos can afford to pay Woodson $2-4 million per season. If Denver is willing to raise their offer, Woodson may be a Bronco before the end of the week.

3. First Look at New Broncos in Orange and Blue

(Photo provided courtesy of @MonteeBall on Twitter)

This will mark the first time that all of the new Broncos—the drafted rookies, undrafted college free agents, returning practice squad players, free agent acquisitions and returning veterans—will be out on the practice field working together.

If seeing all of the news guys working with each other for the first times doesn't get you excited as a Broncos fan, then nothing will.

We are in the early stages of Denver's offseason program, but progress is being made everyday. That progress will continue this week.

It will be interesting to see how Denver plans to rotate these defensive lineman, and where and when Miller and Phillips, who are both technically outside linebackers, will be asked to play with their hands on the ground.

This week, we'll get an early look at Denver's defensive line and how the linemen stack up.

8. Will Ryan Clady Show Up?

In reality, we'll be really watching for just one player on Monday: Ryan Clady.

Clady, Denver's All-Pro left tackle, was slapped with a $9.6 million franchise tag by the team earlier in the offseason—but if he is going to come to work, he wants a raise.

Clady has been recovering from shoulder surgery on his own this offseason and hasn't yet showed up to the team's Dove Valley headquarters. Technically, everything team activity conducted so far this offseason has been "voluntary," so Clady hasn't truly been holding out.

But if the Broncos don't workout a long-term contract with him before training camp, this may turn out into a real holdout, and that's something the team does not want to see happen.

Perhaps some of the $5 million in cap space created by Peyton's restructured contract will be put towards Clady's new deal, but only time will tell.

Unless it is to discuss a new contract, don't expect Clady to show up this week.